BREAKING

Sunday, May 17, 2026

The Rotting Rhythms of the Hindu Kush: How Climate Change is Withering Chitral’s Ancient Way of Life

 


Wazzup Pilipinas!? 



The scent of drying apricots once defined the mountain air of Chitral’s Kalash and Arkari valleys. For generations, these high-altitude orchards hung heavy with vibrant fruit, sustaining families, anchoring sacred traditions, and fueling local economies. Today, those same orchards tell a deeply haunting story.


Blossoms are ruthlessly battered by untimely rains, fruit ripens with unnatural speed under an oppressive sun, and aggressive pest infestations rot produce long before it can be harvested. In the valleys once synonymous with an abundance of apricots, pears, and mulberries, climate change is steadily eroding both livelihoods and centuries-old cultural practices. Farmers are left standing in their fields, looking at the skies, entirely uncertain of what each new season will bring.


For the people of Chitral, global warming is no longer a abstract environmental warning for the future; it is a quiet catastrophe unfolding in real time in their kitchens, their markets, and their soil.


The Collapsing Economy of the Orchards

The rising temperatures and unpredictable precipitation patterns induced by climate change have thrown the delicate agricultural systems of Chitral’s mountainous valleys into chaos. Local experts and farmers reveal that apricot production has been the hardest hit, suffering a steep decline over the last four to five years.


Shahi Gul, 48, a mother of six and the sole breadwinner for her family in Bumburate, Kalash Valley, watches this decline with growing desperation. Her land is home to a traditional mix of mulberry, apricot, walnut, pear, apple, and cherry trees.


"The trend has affected all kinds of fruit production, but most of all apricots and pears," Gul laments. "When the weather was favourable for these fruits, local people would dry mulberries, pears, and apricots and store them for other seasons, while fresh fruit, which is in great demand, would be sold in the market. The situation has now changed, and people are hardly able to store enough even for their own use."


This ecological shift has triggered an economic freefall. Visitors traveling to the iconic Kalash Valley have long sought out its famed pears, apricot kernels, dried mulberries, and walnuts. For a family with large orchards, a single season used to yield roughly Rs500,000. Today, because the extreme heat routinely destroys the fruit before it can be sold, seasonal incomes have plummeted to a meager Rs100,000.


"With this low income, we can hardly meet our expenses," Gul says. With six children enrolled in school, the sudden evaporation of her farming revenue has made it difficult to manage even basic daily household needs.


The scope of what is at risk is captured vividly in government data. According to 2025 records shared by the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Agriculture Department, the Chitral tehsil (including the Kalash valley) produced 44 metric tons of apricots, 98 metric tons of apples, 71.5 metric tons of pears, and 285.6 metric tons of walnuts. Meanwhile, Lotkoh tehsil (which encompasses the remote Arkari valley bordering Afghanistan’s Badakhshan province) recorded 52.25 metric tons of apricots, 234.5 metric tons of apples, and 226 metric tons of walnuts.


Yet, local orchard owners warn that this year's unusual weather patterns threaten to slash those numbers to historic lows.


Shifting Seasons and Ruined Blossoms

The mechanics of this environmental crisis lie in the drastic disruption of seasonal rhythms. Shehzad Ahmad, Assistant Director of Agriculture Extension for Lower Chitral, explains that the region's weather has inverted.


"In the past, rainfall was timely, of shorter duration, and less intense," Ahmad notes. "This year, rains arrived earlier than usual, and the intensity was higher and lasted much longer. As a result, the blossom on apricot trees was damaged... Due to similar conditions, in 2023, apricot production was almost zero."


Historically, the life-giving rains of the valley arrived safely after the fruit-setting stage, usually commencing after March 15. Now, the precipitation triggers abruptly at the very start of the month, precisely when the delicate blossoms emerge. This year, nearly the entire month of March was lost to relentless rainfall.


Because of this rapid warming, the timeline of the fruit itself has warped. In the Arkari Valley, where women from nearly 954 households depend entirely on farming and kitchen gardening for survival, the compressed lifecycle of the crops is causing widespread panic.


"Previously, apricots took almost a month to mature, but now they ripen in about 10 days due to warm weather," says Sameena, a local farmer. Fruits that were traditionally harvested in the cooler months of July and August are now forced to maturity by the end of June. The result is not an early bounty, but massive wastage and rapid infestation.


"The shift in weather patterns has caused a 50 percent reduction in income from fruit production," Sameena explains. "We have good quality apples, but due to global warming, we can neither take them to the market on time nor can we make jam and murrabba (fruit preserve) with it. Infestation destroys the fruit, incurring financial loss every season. This has been the case over the past five to six years."


A Threat to Culture and Memory

The crisis extends far beyond the loss of currency; it is chipping away at the cultural identity of the region's indigenous communities.


Meerkai Bibi, 58, remembers a radically different Bumburate Valley. "A few years ago, snow remained in the area until March and April, keeping temperatures low," she recalls. In that stable environment, families relied on centuries-old traditional methods to dry fruits and store fresh pears for the long winter months.


Today, the introduction of unprecedented humidity and soaring heat causes apricots to rot and develop mold during the drying process. In lower altitude zones, pear production has collapsed entirely. "Only walnut production is still thriving," Meerkai Bibi says. "Grapes, apricots, pears, apples, and mulberries begin to rot before they fully ripen. These fruits are neither suitable for sale in the market, nor can we serve them to guests at home."


This reality struck a painful chord during Chawmos, the traditional Kalash winter festival celebrated every December. It is a sacred custom to serve home-grown, dried fruits from one's own orchard to visiting relatives and guests. This past year, for the first time in memory, Meerkai Bibi's family had to buy fruit from the commercial market to sustain their ancestral festival.


"I am worried that we can no longer offer fruit from our own orchards during traditional ceremonies, nor can we properly host guests from different parts of the country and the world, who visit the valley for its culture, beauty, and natural gifts," she says softly. "If the temperatures get any higher, we may lose most of our natural products."


Invasion of the Fruit Fly

The warmth has also invited new, destructive forces into the mountains. According to Assistant Professor Dr. Muhammad Ali from the Department of Food Science and Technology at the University of Agriculture Peshawar, the region is facing an ecological invasion.


The destructive fruit fly, historically non-native to the high-altitude, freezing climates of Swat and Chitral, has migrated upward. The warming valleys have created a hospitable ecosystem for these pests, alongside various microbial organisms and fungal infections, resulting in widespread infestation.


Compounding the crisis is the breakdown of local infrastructure. Ilyas Khan, 35, from the Arkari Valley, points out that the changing climate has forced villagers to buy fans for the summer—an appliance completely unheard of during his childhood.


"Even snowfall patterns have changed," Khan observes. "Some years ago, it began to snow in December, but now it has moved up to January and February. It even starts to melt away earlier, leaving the weather much warmer than it used to be."


This overarching warmth has systematically degraded staple crops like potatoes, wheat, and maize. And when the weather does break, it does so with violence. Torrential rains, flash floods, and sudden landslides routinely choke the narrow mountain passes, shutting down roads for days at a time. Farmers are trapped; their delicate, rapidly ripening harvests rot away in storage spaces, entirely cut off from the markets.


The Macro Reality of a Micro Crisis

The plight of Chitral mirrors a broader, national vulnerability. According to the Climate Risk Index (CRI) 2025 published by Germanwatch, Pakistan stands alongside Belize and Italy as one of the nations most severely ravaged by extreme climate anomalies. The memory of the cataclysmic 2022 monsoon season—which impacted over 33 million citizens, claimed 1,700 lives, and inflicted $15 billion in damages—still casts a long shadow over the state.


Yet, while national statistics capture the macroeconomic devastation, the true tragedy of climate change is found in the valleys of Kalash and Arkari. It is found in the anxious calculations of mothers trying to pay for schoolbooks, in the empty fruit platters of ancient winter festivals, and in the quiet rotting of an orchard harvest.


Currently, no formal, comprehensive scientific studies have been executed to measure the exact parameters of the damage in these specific valleys, though the Agriculture Extension Department plans to initiate joint research with partner organizations soon. In the meantime, some desperate farmers have begun deploying modern fruit fly traps and experimental agricultural drying techniques to salvage what little they can.


But time is running out. Unless aggressive climate adaptation measures, targeted scientific intervention, and robust agricultural support systems are implemented swiftly, these mountain communities face a bleak future. They risk losing far more than their legendary sweet apricots and crisp pears—they risk losing an entire, beautiful way of life shaped by the ancient rhythms of the Hindu Kush.


Saturday, May 16, 2026

The Architecture of Impunity: How Political Survival Is Dismantling the Rule of Law

 


Wazzup Pilipinas!?



The theater of modern Philippine politics has long been mastered by those who know how to weaponize distraction. Today, we are witnessing a masterclass in this art form.


The swirling narratives surrounding Senator Ronald “Bato” dela Rosa, the looming shadow of the International Criminal Court (ICC), and the frantic defenses mounted by their allies reveal a disease far deeper than standard political maneuvering. It exposes a deliberate, calculated effort to oversimplify the law, distort accountability, and hollow out democratic institutions—all for the sake of political survival.


When the machinery of power is threatened, its first line of defense is to rewrite the rules of reality. But for a democracy to survive, citizens—and guardians of the law—must refuse to read from their script.


The False Dichotomy: Justice vs. Hunger

Among the many rhetorical shields deployed by defenders of the status quo, one recurring argument stands out for its insidious simplicity: “Kapag ba nahuli si Bato, hindi na magugutom ang Pilipinas?” (If Bato is caught, will the Philippines stop being hungry?)


It is a clever, cynical ploy. It attempts to hijacked the genuine suffering of the poor to insulate the powerful from scrutiny. But this argument completely misses the point—or rather, it deliberately tries to hide it.


A nation does not choose between achieving justice and solving poverty. A functioning democracy must pursue both.


   [ Weakened Institutions ] ──► [ Erased Public Trust ]

              ▲                               │

              │                               ▼

[ Insulated Power & Impunity ] ◄── [ Ordinary Citizen Suffers ]

Hunger, corruption, abuse of power, criminal accountability, inflation, and institutional decay are not isolated problems; they are deeply interconnected. When powerful individuals are insulated from accountability, public trust erodes, state institutions weaken, and the rule of law fractures. When the law becomes optional for the elite, it becomes oppressive for the weak. Ordinary citizens ultimately pay the price for a broken system, enduring both economic hardship and structural injustice.


The Illusion of Leadership

As the political tectonic plates shift, a parallel narrative has emerged—one that attempts to measure leadership through a ledger of credentials, military medals, or performative toughness. We see public relations campaigns comparing Bato dela Rosa to other officials, relying heavily on rank, bravado, and blind political loyalty.


But leadership was never meant to be measured by the weight of brass on a chest or the volume of a strongman’s rhetoric.


Leadership is measured by integrity.


A true leader respects institutions even—and especially—when they are inconvenient. A true public servant understands that accountability is not a personal persecution, but a constitutional duty. Democracies do not collapse because they lack strongmen; they collapse because they normalize impunity.


Coincidence or Strategy? The Timing of the Defiance

What raises legitimate public concern is the timing and context of this sudden surge in defensive nationalism. We are currently witnessing:


A volatile impeachment issue involving Vice President Sara Duterte.


A high-stakes shift in Senate leadership dynamics.


Intensifying discussions surrounding imminent ICC accountability.


Highly visible, coordinated political positioning by Bato dela Rosa and his allies.


Citizens are naturally asking whether these overlapping events are mere coincidences or calculated political chess moves designed to shield key figures from legal consequences.


To ask these questions is not conspiracy thinking. That is democratic scrutiny.


Yet, instead of addressing legitimate legal questions with transparency and rigor, some political figures have reduced a profound constitutional debate into emotional slogans about nationalism and sovereignty.


The Weaponization of "Sovereignty"

For law students, lawyers, and anyone who believes in the majesty of the law, the current discourse is deeply alarming. To hear lawmakers and public officials casually dismiss the International Criminal Court as if international law simply evaporates when it becomes politically inconvenient is a betrayal of the legal order.


In the study of Constitutional Law, Public International Law, and Criminal Law, we are taught a foundational truth: certain crimes transcend borders because they offend humanity itself. Crimes against humanity, genocide, war crimes, and piracy are not ordinary domestic offenses. They are shocks to the collective conscience of humankind.


That is precisely why institutions like the ICC exist.


       ┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐

       │             THE TIMELINE OF JURISDICTION               │

       └────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

                                    

  Philippines Ratifies         Alleged Drug War Crimes         Philippines Withdraws

    the Rome Statute                 Take Place                  from Rome Statute

           │                              │                              │

           ▼                              ▼                              ▼

  ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────►

                                          │

                                          ▼

                               [ ICC Retains Jurisdiction ]

                        (For acts committed during membership)

The loud assertion that the ICC has "no jurisdiction" is a distortion manufactured for political consumption. The alleged acts under scrutiny connected to the Duterte administration’s war on drugs—where dela Rosa served as the architect and former Chief of the Philippine National Police—occurred while the Philippines was a State Party to the Rome Statute. Under well-established international law, withdrawing from a treaty does not erase liability for acts committed during the period of membership.


Furthermore, contrary to the nationalist rhetoric repeatedly invoked by personalities like Senator Robin Padilla, the ICC is not a “foreign state” trespassing on Philippine soil.


The ICC is an international judicial institution created through treaty obligations voluntarily entered into by sovereign states. The Philippines ratified the Rome Statute through its own constitutional processes. Joining it was not a surrender of sovereignty; it was an exercise of sovereignty through international agreement. Modern sovereignty is not absolute isolationism. The Philippine Constitution itself explicitly adopts the generally accepted principles of international law as part of the law of the land.


The Myth of the "Fake" Warrant

Equally misleading is the loud propaganda claim that only Philippine courts can issue "valid" warrants of arrest, rendering international legal processes "fake" or "non-existent."


This is legally illiterate. Courts derive authority from different legal sources:


Domestic Courts derive their authority from national Constitutions and domestic statutes.


International Tribunals derive their authority from treaties and recognized principles of international law.


An international warrant does not become "fake" simply because it was not signed by a local Regional Trial Court judge or a Supreme Court Justice. The real legal issue is whether the issuing tribunal lawfully acquired jurisdiction. Once a court or tribunal acquires cognizance over a matter, legal processes follow accordingly unless overturned through proper, established judicial remedies.


Jurisdictional objections are litigated through formal legal mechanisms inside a courtroom—not through fiery political speeches, emotional appeals to nationalism, or media propaganda. If the law allowed otherwise, any accused criminal anywhere in the world could simply evade trial by claiming patriotism or shouting political persecution.


The Peril of Anti-Legal Thinking

The greatest danger facing the nation today is not merely the spread of misinformation. It is the normalization of anti-legal thinking disguised as nationalism.


We must separate raw emotion from legal doctrine. Jurisdiction, cognizance, treaty obligations, due process, and crimes against humanity are not flexible political buzzwords; they are legal concepts built upon centuries of jurisprudence and global practice.


Democracy survives not when institutions are bent to protect the powerful, but when institutions remain strong enough to hold even the most powerful accountable under the rule of law. When the dust settles, the true test of the Philippines will not be how well it shielded its politicians, but whether it chose to defend the integrity of its justice system.

The Architecture of Intention: Why Malaysia Must Shatter the AI Compliance Illusion

 


Wazzup Pilipinas!? 



A profound geopolitical and technological drama is quietly unfolding across Southeast Asia. As Artificial Intelligence deepens its footprint across banking, agriculture, healthcare, and public services, a silent crisis of sovereignty is taking root. For years, AI governance has followed a weary, predictable itinerary: technology matures in the West or China, its structural harms become undeniable, and regulators in the Global South scramble to clone foreign frameworks.


Today, ASEAN’s ten member states stand at a historic crossroads. Will the region actively shape the digital minds governing its future, or will it remain a passive recipient of code written for entirely different societies?


The answer hinges on a crucial distinction: the difference between an AI that is merely "safe and compliant," and one that is genuinely prosocial. Writing for The Edge Malaysia, Dr. Cornelia C. Walther—a humanitarian veteran with over two decades at the United Nations and an associate professor at Sunway University—argues that Malaysia possesses the exact cultural, institutional, and ecological ingredients to shatter this passive loop and pioneer a new paradigm for the region.


But to do so, Malaysia must first escape the compliance trap.


The Blind Spots of Foreign Code

Across Southeast Asia, the current regulatory landscape is fragmented and heavily derivative. Singapore leads with its Model AI Governance Framework and AI Verify toolkit; Vietnam has enacted its AI Law; Thailand and the Philippines have mapped out national strategies. Yet, beneath the surface of these policy papers lies a stark vulnerability: the AI systems actually being deployed across ASEAN are overwhelmingly built elsewhere.


They are trained on datasets that look, speak, and earn nothing like a smallholder farmer in Kedah or a Tamil-speaking garment worker in Johor.


This is not merely a philosophical mismatch; it is a vector for real-world harm. Research on Large Language Models (LLMs) reveals a severe performance degradation when applied to non-English languages. Because these systems lack local cultural literacy, they risk executing decisions that are biased, inaccurate, or entirely detached from local realities—harms that currently go undocumented and unmeasured.


In response, governments have reached for the familiar toolkit of compliance, mimicking the rigorous bureaucracy of the European Union’s AI Act. Businesses conduct risk classifications, commission bias audits, and publish beautifully articulated "Responsible AI" statements.


While these paper trails soothe multinational investors, they represent a low ceiling. A system can check every box of international regulation while remaining predatory. It can be legally non-discriminatory yet culturally illiterate. It can pass safety audits while consuming energy at a rate that actively sabotages the host nation's climate commitments.


Compliance is designed to prevent the catastrophic worst; it is fundamentally incapable of engineering the societal best.


The Prosocial Frontier: From "Do No Harm" to "Do Great Good"

To move beyond compliance, the algorithmic architecture itself must be rewritten with regenerative intent. This is the core of ProSocial AI—technology engineered from inception to amplify human agency, distribute economic value equitably, protect the ecosystem, and foster community capacity. You cannot retrofit this philosophy onto an existing model; it must be chosen at the starting line.


       THE COMPLIANCE TRAP vs. PROSOCIAL AI

┌─────────────────────────────────┐  ┌─────────────────────────────────┐

│     SAFE & COMPLIANT AI         │  │          PROSOCIAL AI           │

├─────────────────────────────────┤  ├─────────────────────────────────┤

│ • Aim: Prevent the worst        │  │ • Aim: Achieve the best         │

│ • Focus: Risk & Liabilities     │  │ • Focus: Values & Human Agency  │

│ • Metric: Paper audit trails    │  │ • Metric: Holistic Social Index │

│ • Approach: Retrofitted rules   │  │ • Approach: Embedded from scratch│

└─────────────────────────────────┘  └─────────────────────────────────┘

Why is Malaysia uniquely positioned to lead this global shift?


First, Malaysia is a living laboratory of genuine linguistic and cultural plurality. With Bahasa Melaya, Mandarin, Tamil, English, and dozens of indigenous languages woven into daily life, building AI for the Malaysian context forces engineers to solve for true diversity rather than dominant-language approximations.


Second, Malaysia is a global pioneer in environmental policy, having adopted the National Planetary Health Action Plan. This systemic mindset—which links ecological health directly to human survival—can naturally be extended to digital infrastructure, connecting algorithmic efficiency to planetary outcomes.


Finally, the country possesses the necessary institutional engine, powered by the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MOSTI), the Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation (MDEC), and an academic ecosystem untainted by the commercial blind spots of Silicon Valley.


Auditing the Future: The ProSocial AI Index

To bridge the gap between high-minded principles and practical accountability, Malaysia can weaponize a new auditable standard: the ProSocial AI Index.


Developed across premier global research hubs—including the Sunway Institute for Global Strategy and Competitiveness, the Wharton School, and the Harvard Learning and Innovation Lab—the Index moves beyond the binary of compliance. It scores and evaluates systems across four foundational dimensions: Purpose, People, Profit, and Planet.


               THE PROSOCIAL AI INDEX

               

                     [PURPOSE]

             Is the system's core intent 

               aligned with human good?

                         │

                         │

    [PEOPLE] ◄───────────┼───────────► [PROFIT]

 Is it tailored &     Is value distributed 

tested for diversity?   equitably to users?

                         │

                         │

                     [PLANET]

             Is its carbon and energy 

             footprint sustainable?

The Index forces developers to answer hard, structural questions: Is this system tailored, trained, tested, and targeted to elevate the communities it serves? By institutionalizing this index, Malaysia does not have to wait for a slow-moving regional consensus among ASEAN nations. It can lead by example.


A Manifest Destiny for the Global South

Pioneering this space requires bold national execution. Malaysia can transform the ProSocial AI Index into a strict government procurement standard. If an AI vendor bidding for a public contract cannot prove its system scores adequately on the "Tailored" and "Targeted" pillars, the contract is denied—regardless of how highly the vendor’s Silicon Valley headquarters rates its global benchmarks.


This creates a powerful ripple effect. It gives civil society, the private sector, and the press a rigorous vocabulary to audit deployed systems. It shifts the corporate narrative from a narrow return on investment (ROI) to an expansive, holistic return on values (ROV).


The 680 million citizens of ASEAN deserve technology that recognizes their identity, respects their ecology, and protects their futures. They deserve an AI designed with them in mind—not adapted for them as an afterthought, and not governed by rules drafted on the other side of the world.


The infrastructure is ready, the framework exists, and the historical opening is clear. The rest of the region, and indeed the entire Global South, is watching. Malaysia has the opportunity to prove that technology can truly serve humanity—if only we have the courage to build it that way.


Ang Pambansang Blog ng Pilipinas Wazzup Pilipinas and the Umalohokans. Ang Pambansang Blog ng Pilipinas celebrating 10th year of online presence
 
Copyright © 2013 Wazzup Pilipinas News and Events
Design by FBTemplates | BTT